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Discovering Frank Auberbach’s true colours

An impressive exhibition shows our greatest living artist in a new light, says Anthea Gerrie

April 7, 2022 12:20
Frank Auerbach, The Origin of the Great Bear, Oil paint on board, 1967-8. Courtesy of Tate, London
Frank Auerbach, The Origin of the Great Bear, Oil paint on board, 1967-8. Courtesy of Tate, London
4 min read

Since the death of his close friend Lucien Freud, surely Frank Auerbach is the leading candidate for the title of Britain’s greatest living painter? Still painting every day, in his 90s, Auerbach is the subject of a new exhibition which shows an unexpected side to his work.

“He grew up loving to draw but never thought of becoming a painter — and only found out how difficult what he imagined would be a pleasant career really was when he was plunged into years of struggle to get it right,” says Maya Binkin, artistic advisor to Newlands House Gallery in deepest West Sussex. It’s the unlikely venue for Frank Auerbach: Unseen, far from the capital where the artist has lived for 75 years. Auerbach dabbled in acting before committing to art, and as the exhibition makes clear, he might well have been a cartoonist.

The show is driven by a series of extraordinary drawings the artist made in the National Gallery in response to paintings there. “He was much more drawn to the English Old Masters than the Dutch or Italians,” says Binkin, who finds the often frantic scribbles in felt tip and pencil “full of energy, like animations, almost”. And like the best cartoonists, he caricatured the best features of his subjects, turning to correcting liquid to capture the ghostly white face of Anne, Countess of Albemarle, a mother of 15 portrayed as a formidable matriarch by Sir Joshua Reynolds, while only watercolour would do to pay homage to the dusty blues, yellows (and more pink than the original) of Turner’s Sun Rising Through Vapour, overlaid with rapid felt-tip outlines of boats, sails and the edges of clouds and coastline.